40 Years Later: Reflecting on ‘Roe’ and ‘Doe’
It is extremely difficult to think about what one might say after 40 years of decriminalized barbarism.
It is extremely difficult to think about what one might say after 40 years of decriminalized barbarism.
I am having a difficult time discerning exactly what it is that has Cardinal Timothy Dolan so hot under the collar when it comes to the pro-abortion inclinations of his friend, Catholic New York governor Andrew Cuomo.
The new year has just gotten started and already the nation’s major enemy of human dignity is up to something suspicious.
Anyone who has seen the latest DROID DNA smart phone ads realizes that such devices have become nearly inseparable from man’s person.
With the passage of each year it appears that more and more Americans are being served a platter of nuanced messages regarding how one is to care for a dying loved one.
This past year has witnessed an escalation in the redefining of human rights.
As a new year approaches, we naturally reflect on the one past. While it’s easy to get caught up in the negatives of the past year, we must identify and focus on the positive things that have happened as well.
It is reported that Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal is a Catholic. Further, it has been said that he is a conservative Republican.
In today’s twisted ethical environment, the status of the human person increasingly depends on the opinion of the individual closest to the microphone.
The United States Department of Education (DOE) is investigating a junior ROTC instructor who is reported to have said that the Bible condemns homosexuality.
A running controversy centers on the question of whether or not it is a good idea to provide pre-prescriptions of morning after pills to young people who have not yet reached the age of 17.
Some of us who have been involved in battling the culture of death for more than 40 years realize that the time has come to reevaluate the way we approach our goal to end the moral madness that permeates today’s culture.